The sum of all natural [positive whole] numbers 1 to 100 can be calculated using the formula, S = n/2 × [2a + (n − 1) × d], where n is the total number of natural numbers from 1 to 100, d is the difference between the two consecutive terms, and a is the first term. There are a total of 100 natural numbers, so n = 100.
Thus, a = 1, d = 1, and n = 100. Let's calculate the sum of the natural numbers 1 to 100. Use the formula. S = n/2 × [2a + (n − 1) × d] S = 100/2 × [2 + (100 – 1) × 1] S = 50 × [2 + 99] S = 5050 Isn’t that answer interesting?
0 Comments
Following is an orchestral work by Vivaldi that has been transcribed for organ with a few subtitles added to explain the wintry tableau Vivaldi tried to create. As with any good story, there is a beginning, middle, and ending, and the theme is stated at the end of the beginning section, just as it is done in a good essay, but the master saves the excitement until the end. I think music is the way Vivaldi (and Mozart) prayed. God put so much inside them that they had to let it out. The church in Spain is graced by geometry and fine acoustics, the application of which is present in many aspects of modern society, such as the audio and noise control industries. The plaque reads: Me fecit Gerhard Grenzing I, Gerhard Grenzing, made this organ. See the figures holding up the organ. The piece is 10 minutes long. By Aaron Green June 29, 2018 … Gregorio Allegri composed Miserere mei, Deus in the 1630s, during the papacy of Pope Urban VIII … [Urban] loved the piece so much that he forbade it to be performed elsewhere outside of the Sistine Chapel. For over 100 years, Allegri's piece was performed there exclusively. Anyone caught with a transcription of the piece outside of the chapel could be immediately excommunicated from the Church.
In 1770, a 14-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was present at one of the performances while touring Italy with his father. After hearing the piece, Mozart transcribed the work entirely from memory and even made corrections. He attended one more performance to make his final adjustments. The following year, after meeting with music historian and biographer, Dr. Charles Burney, Mozart gave him the sheet music. Burney took the score to London and published it, which resulted in the papacy lifting its ban. My funeral, Holy Cross, Colma, CA. Be there or be square. Date to be determined. Here are some rules for making Latin or Greek plurals.
Nouns ending in “-a” switch to “-ae” to make the word plural. alga → algae larva → larvae vertebra → vertebrae Nouns with an “-um” ending turn into an “-a” ending. candelabrum → candelabra medium → media spectrum → spectra Words that end in “-is” are swapped to “-es” to make them plural. paralysis → paralyses diagnosis → diagnoses thesis → theses Terms that end in “-us” can be made plural using “-i” in place of “-us.” cactus → cacti alumnus → alumni syllabus → syllabi However, English has gone its own way, and exceptions abound, less so in the sciences than in everyday usage. That’s English, ever-changing, forcing us to use a dictionary. That’s the beauty of Latin, never-changing. I had the help of wordgenius. Forty is the only numerical word with each letter in alphabetical order.
“Bookkeeper” is the only word in the English language that uses three sets of repeated letters in a row.
Law – Adrian Vermeule AB Harvard College 1990, JD Harvard Law School 1993, mother classical scholar Harvard, father curator Classical Department Boston Museum of Fine Arts, sister literary scholar and Professor of English Stanford
Politics – Senator John Neely Kennedy BA Vanderbilt 1973, president senior class and Phi Beta Kappa, JD University of Virginia School of Law 1977, executive editor of Virginia Law Review, Bachelor of Civil Law first class honors Magdalen College Oxford 1979, studied under Sir Rupert Cross and John H.C. Morris Science – Richard Lindzen Bronx High School of Science, winner of Regents and National Merit Scholarships, AB Physics Harvard 1960, S.M. Applied Mathematics Harvard 1961, PhD Applied Mathematics Harvard 1964, doctoral thesis Radiative and photochemical processes in strato - and mesospheric dynamics Economics – Milton Friedman BA Rutgers University 1932, MA University of Chicago 1933, PhD Columbia University 1934, Professor University of Chicago 1947-1977, visiting scholar Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco, colleague Hoover Institution Stanford Literature – J.R.R. Tolkien English Language and Literature Exeter College Oxford 1915 first-class honors, tutored by Joseph Wright, author of Primer of the Gothic Language, tutor at Lady Margaret Hall and St. Hugh’s College 1919, reader at the University of Leeds 1920 Two Jews, two Catholics, and one Protestant. No one’s perfect, but a few get close. The only information about this third century Roman martyr is a reference to him by Pope Damasus (366–384). One day, young Tarcisius was entrusted with the task of bringing the Eucharist to condemned Catholics in prison. He preferred death at the hands of a mob rather than hand over the Blessed Sacrament. Burial took place in the catacombs of San Callisto, and later, Damasus wrote an inscription. Par meritum, quicumque legis, cognosce duorum, quis Damasus rector titulos post praemia reddit. Iudaicus populus Stephanum meliora monentem perculerat saxis, tulerat qui ex hoste tropaeum, martyrium primus rapuit levita fidelis. Tarsicium sanctum Christi sacramenta gerentem cum male sana manus premeret vulgare profanis, ipse animam potius voluit dimittere caesus prodere quam canibus rabidis caelestia membra. 1. reddit: second line reddit means to submit for consideration. 2. result: Tarcisius is listed in the Roman Martyrology. 3. source: Damasi Epigrammata, Maximilian Ihm, 1895, n. 14. Maximilian Ihm (1863 - 1909) was a German classical philologist, a person who studies historical and comparative linguistics. I have watched plenty of interviews of crime targets. Frequently, the target is asked if he/she forgives the assailant. My reaction is always the same. I want to counsel the target to say, “Forgiveness is between me and God. You don’t need to know.”
One writing prompt for students is, “Have I asked God’s help to forgive someone? Write about it.” For young students, this situation may not have arisen, but for every adult forgiveness becomes a challenge. My faith tells me that God will forgive me according to the measure I have forgiven all others. In life, one gets two choices: do what is right or do what is wrong. As the end nears, the choices are bumped up to three: heaven, purgatory, or hell. The novel is about secrets. If the novel had been a true story, it would have made the news. However, some secrets are not worth revealing.
Reason #1: many people find it difficult to handle the skeletons in someone else’s closet. Reason #2: some puzzles belong in the hands of professionals – doctor, lawyer, accountant, priest. They have a privilege. As the main character in Pretty City Murder says, labels belong on cereal boxes. Labels do not accurately tell what is on the inside. Children do not try to pry open the human box. They must know that a person's totality belongs to God alone, and His forgiveness is His. 1916 born Emil J Kapaun
1946 commissioned US Army Captain 1951 died, the result of malnutrition and pneumonia, Korean War 2013 awarded Medal of Honor, 9th military chaplain recipient 2021 returned home, body accounted for Excerpts from a report by Martina Moyski, Oct 1, 2021:
“There will come a time when we must make a choice between being loyal to the true Faith or giving allegiance to something else ... O God, we ask of thee to give us the courage to be ever faithful to Thee.” - Kapaun Altan (13-year-old whiz) and I learned today:
1) The square root of an exponent is ½ of the exponent. 2) When you want two probabilities to occur (probabilities are ratios, such as 1:5 or one out of five or 1/5), multiply the two fractions, such as 1/5 times 1/4. 3) The square root of a negative number is plus or minus, the square root of the negative number as a positive number, paired with i, the notation for an imaginary number. √-25 = ±5i In math the symbol for √−1 is i for imaginary. |
Categories
All
Archives
April 2024
|